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Which countries have you visited without a visa in the EU? What documentation were you required to provide at the border and how did it go?Tobbe wrote:I have been travelling to a few countries in Europe with my Bolivian wife without any problems but we got denied entry in Spain and got deported a few months back.
They are being rude. Your wife would not need a visa even if she was not your wife. And since she is your wife and is travelling with you, she has the same right of free movement as you do. They can not refuse her entry except in a few very exceptional circumstances. You should carry a copy of your marriage certificate to prove her relationship to you.szabcsee wrote:I'm looking for some information, hopefully in the right place. Two days ago visited Barcelona with my wife who is Venezuelan. I'm Hungarian and we are living in the UK. She has her (UK)FMRS resident stamp in her passport and as far as we know she can enter any EU countries as a turist without visas for 3 months. At the border the Imm. Officer for this sentence answered with a "You Think!!!" Finally she said she will let her in after asking many questions and being dead rude, but she said my wife needs something (could not figure out what, she basically ignored me and did not want to speak english at all, and my wife said she said some kind of request blablabla... no clue). My question is, does the rules changed and Venezuelans need special something to enter Spain, can my wife enter Spain with me with her passport only or under some kind of EU Regulations (as I'm being EU Citizen), does the British Residence Stamp has any effect on this when we travel abroad? We have been to spain, france, Hungary many times without any problem with her passport. What can we do if we want to live in Spain? Where can i get information about Residency for Non-EEA family member of EEA citizen in Spain?
So am I correct in understanding that you did not have a Schengen visa but you had no problems entering France, Denmark, Germany and Sweden by showing your wife's UK issued Residence Card. This is good news! Have you had any problems boarding flights from the UK without having the Schengen visa?Tobbe wrote:I have been to France,Denmark, Germany and Sweden (Sweden being my home country and they still said the UK EEA resident card is valid there). We had our marriage certificate with us. We appealed in national court or at least we think we did :) The lawyer provided to us wasn't to willing to do anything other then trying to get a signature on the paper work and it's extremely hard to get hold of her.
I know the reason under which we can get refused entry and it is not one of thoose. It was due to not having a visa and not holding enough cash.
And they said that you did not have enough money for your visit? I hope they wrote it down!Tobbe wrote:We did have our marriage certificate with us to Spain and yes they were acting illegal. We were only going for a 5 day holiday to see some family over there and now we are stuck with a months long battle to sort it out :/
You should definitely petition the European Parliament no matter what happens with Solvit. Give the Spanish a little bit of heat. (You can request that your name not be published if you so desire).Tobbe wrote:Yeah we have it in writing.
Yes, the Austrian embassy also told me about the meeting and that "3 countries have implemented the directive 2004/38/EC". Probably, that's what they ment: some countries now accept the UK residence card.Tobbe wrote:It has been moving extremely slowly so nothing new to report.
I did however learn that the Schengen embassies in London had a meeting a few weeks ago to discussing how to treat EEA residence cards issued by the UK. Most of the embassies had no idea on how to treat them but all of them are going to investigate it. Result so far is that Germany and Sweden do accept EEA cards instead of Schengen visas. France and Spain do not accept them and you should apply for a Schengen visa.
Oh, forgot! If there are really just 3 countries, then the third must be Latvia. Their embassy told me so.86ti wrote: Yes, the Austrian embassy also told me about the meeting and that "3 countries have implemented the directive 2004/38/EC". Probably, that's what they ment: some countries now accept the UK residence card.
EEA includes the UK! Do you have a link to the web page?86ti wrote:BTW, my situation is that I could fly without visa to Germany as you pointed out. The Austrian embassy's webpage in Berlin says that EEA resident permits entitle to visa free entry (EEA, nothing about UK) from Germany to Austria. Bloody mess, indeed.
Certainly the UK is a member of the EEA! But the embassy page (again German only) actually says "EWG" not EU?!Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:EEA includes the UK! Do you have a link to the web page?86ti wrote:BTW, my situation is that I could fly without visa to Germany as you pointed out. The Austrian embassy's webpage in Berlin says that EEA resident permits entitle to visa free entry (EEA, nothing about UK) from Germany to Austria. Bloody mess, indeed.
Which is more correct then EU since it also includes countries like Iceland and Norway. Nice to see that they actually done something correct A few more years and we might actually have free movement within Europe!Certainly the UK is a member of the EEA! But the embassy page (again German only) actually says "EWG" not EU?!
Yes, but the German equivalent of EEA = "EWR". The "EWG" was renamed "EG" (= EC in English?) in 1993. So basically the web page would state that the text would be valid for the EU (which still includes the UK) as far as I understand. Confused? Me too! It is strange for me that they used the old name "EWG".Tobbe wrote:Which is more correct then EU since it also includes countries like Iceland and Norway. Nice to see that they actually done something correct A few more years and we might actually have free movement within Europe!Certainly the UK is a member of the EEA! But the embassy page (again German only) actually says "EWG" not EU?!